Word: third
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...broad jump L. T. Sheffield '06, Yale, and D. R. Ayres '05, Harvard, who won respectively second and third places in the dual meet last spring have both returned to college...
...annual business meeting of the Intercollegiate Golf Association was held in New York during the Christmas recess. Representatives were present from Harvard, Pennsylvania and Columbia. Yale and Princeton were not represented. It was decided to hold next year's tournament over the Garden City; Long Island, course during the third week in October. A design for the Intercollegiate cup was approved, and the cup was ordered. M. McBurney '06 and W. E. Egan '05 represented the University...
Despite unfavorable weather conditions work on Emerson Hall, the new building for the Philosophical Department, has been progressing rapidly. The outside walls have been raised to the tops of the window-frames of the third story except at the western end of the building, where the main cornice has just been completed. This cornice is of limestone blocks, weighing from four to six tons each, which extend the entire thickness of the wall and jut out two feet beyond. The brick columns flanking the two entrances have been finished and all the limestone window-frames and trimmings are in position...
...first lecture Professor de Sumichrast will give a history of the creation of the palace and gardens and the transformations which they have undergone, and in the second lecture will describe the French court, its origin, and the position of the king. The third lecture will deal with the more important receptions and entertainments that have been held at Versailles, and in the last lecture the closing scenes of the monarchy, enacted at Versailles at the beginning of the French Revolution, will be discussed...
...paintings by Kaulback. The lines were excellently recited by two of Mr. Conried's artists, and the tableaux, by undergraduates, were enthusiastically received. Mr. Conried then recited "Das Verschleirte Bild zu Sais" and "Die Kraniche des Ibykus." His rendering was both artistic and keenly appreciative. The last number, the third act of Mary Stuart, was a disappointing anti-climax. The character of Queen Elizabeth was played in an intensely unsympathetic manner and the entire act showed the folly of taking a few incomplete scenes from a perfect whole...